I have used my TV's antenna with an FM tuner, and it worked very well. My antenna wire ended in little spade lugs, with (I think) 300 ohms, and you need a black plastic thingy to convert the connector to the round one needed by the TV (don't know what that's called) and 75 ohms impedance. My tuner needed 300 or whatever ohms, so I used the antenna with just the cables ending in the spade lugs. It worked perfectly.

This should work. I've read (while trying to find some antenna that would let me pickup stations on my Outlaw 1050 (the one gripe I have with it)) and someone said that FM radio frequencies were between channels 6 & 7 (VHF).

My experience is pretty much as Wayne's. VHF TV antennae can receive FM (but no AM) as long as they do not have any type of FM trap filtering installed (FM traps are used to help prevent FM interference in some cases.) The easiest way to find out if your's will work is to buy a splitter, hook up the FM tuner and try it.

(BTW, the FM band sits at and just above the channel 6 audio frequency. Channel 6 audio can be picked up on all FM tuners at the bottom 87.7 frequency.)

I was wondering if anyone could reccomend an antenna for FM frequencies from other cities. Howard Stern was taken off of the air in Toronto and my brother would like to be able to hear him from Buffalo. We get it in the car but what could I use at home?

The onmi-directional FM antenna from Radio Shack I mentioned is good for about 50 miles, if I remember. If you need more range than that, a TV antenna will do the job. Just buy one with the range you need and aim it towards the station’s broadcast tower.

If you have another antenna for local stations, you could use an antenna A/B switch to engage the antenna you need for any given time.